Fashion Victim, summary 3
This time I got some new ideas form reading Michelle Lee’s book “Fashion Victim”. In Chapter 6, he quoted Melanie Suhr’s word “Fashion and our culture contribute to the problem”, who is a psychiatrist at Baylor college and PH.D.. (2003, p135) He also thought the fashion industry wasn’t responsible for having created our culture, but this didn’t mean that they didn’t have a responsibility for what they do. In next chapter, Lee talked about “Blaming Fashion”(2003, p171), which was about some negative aspects happening in the factories. He illustrated manufacturers paying lower salaries for workers in developing countries, offering harmful situation, ignoring injured workers, making out unreasonable rules, etc.
This time I got some new ideas form reading Michelle Lee’s book “Fashion Victim”. In Chapter 6, he quoted Melanie Suhr’s word “Fashion and our culture contribute to the problem”, who is a psychiatrist at Baylor college and PH.D.. (2003, p135) He also thought the fashion industry wasn’t responsible for having created our culture, but this didn’t mean that they didn’t have a responsibility for what they do. In next chapter, Lee talked about “Blaming Fashion”(2003, p171), which was about some negative aspects happening in the factories. He illustrated manufacturers paying lower salaries for workers in developing countries, offering harmful situation, ignoring injured workers, making out unreasonable rules, etc.
Vocabulary
1. Covet: To wish for longingly
EX: He won the prize they all coveted.
2. Bulimic: A Person who suffers an eating disorder,
EX: Bulimic will become fatter and fatter.
3. Bribery: the act or practice of giving or accepting a bribe
EX: That mayor should be convicted of bribery.
4. Lovey-dovey: amorously affectionate
EX: They are really a lovey-dovey couple.
5. woe: grievous distress, affliction, or trouble
EX: I cannot tell you my woe because you cannot understand me.
6. svelte: Slender or graceful in figure or outline; slim
EX: I hope I can be as svelte as a model.
7. sneer: smile contemptuously
EX: She sneered at her little sister's efforts to play the song on the piano.
8. fierce: violent in force
EX: That murderer looks like a fierce lion.
9. exploitative: to use selfishly for one's own ends/
EX: Those workers hate their exploitative employer, even want to kill him sometimes.
10. jockey: To trick; cheat
EX: He jockeyed his position in his ex-company.
11. atrocious: Extremely evil or cruel
EX: That old man did an atrocious crime when he was a teenage.
12. semblance: An outward or token appearance
EX: When you feel sad, you don’t need put on a semblance of cheerfulness to us.
13. saccharine: very sweet to the taste; sugary
EX: Doctors recommend people cannot eat saccharine food very often.
14. manipulate: to manage or influence skilfully
EX: A leader should manipulate his group members’ feeling.
15. veteran: Having had long experience or practice
EX: The price should be rewarded to a veteran scientist.